Skin is the second album by the Australian band Endorphin, released in 1999.
Skin
Re-Embrace (Bonus Disc)
More about the skin of aircraft covered in its wings and fuselage.
As the twentieth century progressed, aluminum became an essential metal in aircraft. The cylinder block of the engine that powered the Wright brothers’ plane at Kitty Hawk in 1903 was a one-piece casting in an aluminum alloy containing 8% copper; aluminum propeller blades appeared as early as 1907; and aluminum covers, seats, cowlings, cast brackets, and similar parts were common by the beginning of the First World War.
In 1916, L. Brequet designed a reconnaissance bomber that marked the initial use of aluminum in the working structure of an airplane. By war’s end, the Allies and Germany employed aluminum alloys for the structural framework of fuselage and wing assemblies.
The aircraft airframe has been the most demanding application for aluminum alloys; to chronicle the development of the high-strength alloys is also to record the development of airframes. Duralumin, the first high-strength, heat treatable aluminum alloy, was employed initially for the framework of rigid airships, by Germany and the Allies during World War I. Duralumin was an aluminum-copper-magnesium alloy; it was originated in Germany and developed in the United States as Alloy 17S-T (2017-T4). It was utilized primarily as sheet and plate. Alloy 7075-T6 (70,000-psi yield strength), an Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy, was introduced in 1943. Since then, most aircraft structures have been specified in alloys of this type. The first aircraft designed in 7075-T6 was the Navy’s P2V patrol bomber. A higher-strength alloy in the same series, 7178-T6 (78,000-psi yield strength), was developed in 1951; it has not generally displaced 7075-T6, which has superior fracture toughness. Alloy 7178-T6 is used primarily in structural members where performance is critical under compressive loading.
Almost Human is an American science fiction/crime drama that aired from November 17, 2013, through March 3, 2014, on Fox. The series was created by J. H. Wyman for Frequency Films, Bad Robot Productions and Warner Bros. Television. Wyman, Bryan Burk and J. J. Abrams are executive producers. After one season, Fox canceled the series on April 29, 2014.
In 2048, the uncontrollable evolution of science and technology has caused crime rates to rise an astounding 400%. To combat this, the overwhelmed police force has implemented a new policy: every human police officer is paired with a lifelike combat-model android.
John Kennex (Karl Urban), a troubled detective, has a reason to hate these new robot partners. Almost two years previously, Kennex and his squad were raiding the hideout of a violent gang known as InSyndicate, but ended up being ambushed and outgunned. Kennex tried to save his badly injured partner, but the accompanying logic-based android officer abandoned them both because the wounded man's chances of survival were low and it wouldn't have been "logical" to save him. An explosion then took off Kennex's leg and killed his partner.
Adesso la canzon
Che mi cantavan
Y otra vez
Adesso la canzon
Che mi cantavan
Quando tuve la nonna mia
Quando tuve la nonna mia
La cancion que te cantaban
Lo sabes bien
Que lo mismo
Tengo ahora
Tengo advertido
Mira, mira, mira la canzone
Mira, mira, mira la canzone
Que cantare
Y otra vez, y otra vez
Que si que si que no que no
Que la palabra la tengo yo
Que si que si que no que no
Que la palabra la tengo yo
Oy que si que no
Que la palabra la quiero yo
Adesso la canzon
Che mi cantavan
Quando tuve la nonna mia
Quando tuve la nonna mia
Adesso la canzon
Che mi cantavan
Quando tuve la nonna mia
Quando tuve la nonna mia
Te la cantaban
Otra vez
Sin tu querer
Mira, mira, mira la canzone
Mira, mira, mira la canzone
Que cantare
Y otra vez
Te la cantare
Te la cantare
Que si que si que no que no
Que la palabra la tengo yo
Que si que si que no que no
Que la palabra la tengo yo
Oy que si que no
Que la palabra en el corazon
Que si que si que no que no
Que la palabra la tengo yo
Que si que si que no que no
Que la palabra la tengo yo